All the offices are fairly full….
Let’s stop with the HWF requests now that we are back, and have remote days and weeks available to us.
The exception request process isn’t needed as it’s a waste of time. If a PL wants to manage a situation, do it like prior to Covid… not this silly process that’s costing millions of overhead (yes, million$). So sad.
Ah yes. A selfish look at one tree and completely missing the forest.
There's no reason for each employee to come into the office. Even three days a week is comparable to an 8% pay cut per $100,000. No one got an 8% raise. All bonuses were cut. In prior years the total of all raises did not replace inflation.
We shouldn't be asked to come in without some benefit to us or the company. And any company benefit should be accompanied by compensation at least equal to our prior wages. If we don't have the money to keep wages at 100% YOY then we should close locations and use the savings and proceeds.
Worse, we have the infrastructure for WFH and are paying to maintain it. It's a waste to not use it. And we have to retain it for the next pandemic.
And then there's macro issues. We can't hire in some regions because of housing and availability of applicants. We lose talent. And the planet just past the point where arctic permafrost is a net emitter of greenhouse gasses and we are tracking for the warmest year ever, again. We hit 110 last year and it was miserable. Well, more miserable. Is driving into the office worth it for millions of workers spending their own money and time to make it worse, or, at least, not better?
There's also quite a few not coming in who don't have exceptions. The offices may be fuller, although I don't see it, but they aren't 100% and couldn't support it if everyone came in.
So we have your misleading claim and shilling advocacy that everyone should pull trousers down to their ankles and bend. Or we can be smart employees focused on what matters. And hearing Chuck talk about being in the office? Zero credibility. Think that's wrong? Search for how Walt gives Chuck a weekly summary of the company.